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Home Retail News Data

Latest survey findings see a surge in illicit tobacco consumption in the last year

by Fiona Briggs
October 22, 2025
in Data
Reading Time: 4 mins read

A UK nationwide survey of 6,000 smokers commissioned by the Tobacco Manufacturers’ Association, paints a disturbing picture of the scale of the illicit tobacco market in the UK.

Central findings from the survey

  • 20% of respondents across the UK buy illicit tobacco every week:
    • The highest proportion being in London (24%), closely followed by the North East (22%) and Yorkshire and the Humber (20%)
    • Even in the lowest reported regions (South West, Scotland and Wales) 12% of smokers buy illicit tobacco every week
  • 12% of respondents say they bought the brand ‘Manchester’ which is an ‘illicit white’ brand manufactured in Dubai almost solely for distribution and sale in illegal channels across the world.
  • While the Police generally act as a support to Trading Standards and HMRC in investigations and enforcement action against illicit tobacco, respondents appear to believe the Police should take the lead in combatting illicit tobacco.
    • 53% of smokers said they that they would call the Police with information about illicit tobacco sales
    • 63% agreed that illicit tobacco is linked to gangs and organised crime, with 1 in 2 saying the same gangs trading drugs sell illicit tobacco
    • 69% believed that cheap illicit tobacco makes it easier for children to take up smoking
  • It’s hard to ignore the biggest driver of the illicit tobacco market is the price gap between illicit and legal tobacco
    • The typical price of a 20-pack of illicit cigarettes bought by those surveyed was between £3.00-£6.00 – this is compared to the average price of £16.60 for a 20-pack of legal cigarettes (according to the ONS)
    • The typical price for 50g of handrolling tobacco bought by those surveyed was between £5.00-£8.00 – this is compared to the average price of £40.09 for 50g of legal handrolling tobacco (according to Tesco.com)

The Government is in a state of denial

Five weeks from today, the Government will unveil its latest budget and there is every expectation that it will once again pull one of its favourite policy levers and raise excise on tobacco above inflation based on the flawed belief that it will lead to a reduction in the number of overall smokers.

The Treasury has already given up claiming that the purpose of these continual rises in excise is to boost tax receipts, as tobacco tax revenue has been falling dramatically since the end of the pandemic, dropping by up to a £1 billion each year.

What was once a steady dependable source of annual tax revenue has been over exploited and now sales of legal cigarettes (falling by 42% since the pandemic) and legal handrolling tobacco (declining by 48% over the same period) are in freefall and being replaced by the much cheaper expanding illicit tobacco market.

By far the most significant consequence of the Government’s policy approach towards tobacco taxation is that it is probably the single biggest driver of the expansion of the illicit tobacco market in the UK, and it’s not hard to see why.

As of September 2025, the average recommended retail price (RRP) for a 20-pack of king size cigarettes is £16.60 and the average RRP of 50-grams of rolling tobacco is £40.09 (this means that with the exception of Australia and New Zealand the UK has the most expensive tobacco prices anywhere in the world).

In stark contrast, according to this TMA research conducted between June to August 2025 (canvassing the views of 6,000 UK smokers) the typical price of a 20-pack of illicit cigarettes obtained by those surveyed was between £3.00-£6.00, while the typical price of 50g of illicit handrolling tobacco was between £5.00-£8.00.

Rupert Lewis, Director of the TMA said: “Another year, another illicit tobacco survey, and what is most dispiriting is the fact that the Government is still burying its head in the sand and refusing to listen to the legitimate views and reservations of those UK citizens concerned about the impact of illicit tobacco and the impact that it has upon their lives and their local communities.

“There is a growing disconnect between the public’s tolerance to buy illicit tobacco the product – because it is so much cheaper than legal tobacco, and the negative impact that the wider illicit tobacco industry is having across the UK, with 63% of those surveyed believing illicit tobacco has links to organised crime gangs (which also trade in drugs and people trafficking) and 69% believing that cheap illicit tobacco is making it easier for children to take up smoking.

“The Government’s approach to tobacco policy is deeply flawed. If it continues to rely entirely on exponential tax rises, the experiences of the ‘Tobacco Turf Wars’ in Australia will explode onto Britain’s streets leaving law enforcement powerless to fight back.

“If the Government is serious about reducing smoking rates it needs to execute a twin-track strategy of pursuing stronger ‘zero tolerance’ enforcement action against those criminals trading illicit tobacco, along with prioritising more investment in targeted-education programmes, youth access prevention and smoking support services, and campaigns to educate smokers on less harmful alternative nicotine products.”

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